Paternity Fraud

Half the women said that if they became pregnant by another man but wanted to stay with their partner, they would
lie about the baby's real father.

Forty-two per cent would lie about contraception in order to get pregnant,
no matter the wishes of their partner. More ..

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Report critical of way disabled children treated

Globe and Mail, by Andre Picard, Public Health Reporter, Thursday, November 18, 1999

Canada is systematically violating seven articles of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the
Child, with the most glaring failure its treatment of disabled children, according to a report being
released today.

The report says children in Canada with disabilities are not guaranteed basic educational and social
services. Canada also violates the human rights of refugee claimants and immigrants by rejecting those with
disabilities, the Canadian Coalition for the Rights of Children says.

The umbrella group of 34 non-governmental organizations is calling on the federal government to repeal the
section of the Criminal Code that allows corporal punishment, to modify legislation to specifically
guarantee children's rights, and to honour its commitment to spend 0.7 per cent of gross national product on
international aid.

"Canada meets most of its obligation under the convention, so this report is not a condemnation," Dianne
Bascombe, a board member of the CCRC, said in an interview. "But, from the point of view of children living
in Canada, there is a lot of work to be done. We can't allow ourselves to be complacent."

The Convention on the Rights of the Child, which was adopted by the United Nations in 1989, is touted as the
most comprehensive human rights document in history. All but two countries -- the United States and Somalia
-- have ratified it. Twenty countries have included the convention in their constitutions, and another 32
have modified laws to comply with its terms.

Senator Landon Pearson, the founding chairwoman of the coalition, said that Canadian legislation rarely
recognizes children specifically, and that means adults can place arbitrary limits on children's fundamental
freedoms.

"Putting children in legislation matters because it makes people understand that we are talking about human
beings with rights, not chattel," she said.

The 138-page report, entitled How Does Canada Measure Up?, says there are at least 535,000 children in
Canada who have a long-term emotional, physical or mental disability, with at least 4 per cent of them
considered severely disabled. Those numbers have not been measured since 1991. The report says these
children's right to participate fully in Canadian society is systematically violated.

"Children with disabilities have varying opportunities to live full and decent lives and the supports and
services they need are not considered an entitlement but a privilege. Many families of children with
disabilities do not receive adequate assistance. Early identification and intervention services are not
universally available and the right to appropriate education in the most enabling environment is not
guaranteed," the report says.

Canada is labelled hypocritical for outlawing discrimination against people with disabilities while
explicitly permitting such discrimination in immigration and refugee cases.

Aboriginal children have a disability rate twice that in the general population, and are far more likely to
be victims of abuse. In fact, "abused and neglected children continue to fall through the cracks in our
child welfare system," the coalition says.

The report calls for the immediate repeal of Section 43 of the Criminal Code, which allows "reasonable
force" to be used by parents and teachers meting out discipline. "This provision has been used to justify a
child being punched in the face or pushed down the stairs. In Canada, children are the only category of
persons who can be subject to physical assault without due process," the coalition says. (Section 43 is
currently being challenged in the courts.)

Another area that requires immediate attention, the report says, is Canada's commitment to overseas
development, and to aiding children in particular. Canada spends $1.8-billion annually; that's 0.32 per cent
of GNP, less than half of the government's target of 0.7 per cent, the coalition says.

"Children's rights are an explicit priority in Canadian foreign policy. However, it is not clear how well
that philosophical commitment is supported in practice," the report says. For example, only 11 per cent of
funds from the Canadian International Development Agency ($238-million a year) is targeted at children.

Canada's refugee claim process also neglects the needs of children, according to the Canadian Coalition for
the Rights of Children.

The average wait for a refugee claim is 13 months, an "extraordinarily long period of time from a child's
perspective." For refugees without identity papers, family reunification can take up to seven years. During
the process, refugees cannot travel out of Canada and their families (including children) cannot join them.
In deportation hearings the interests of children, even those born in Canada, do not have to be considered,
the report says.

The coalition is calling for a permanent monitoring mechanism to track compliance with the convention and to
focus public debate on the human rights of children.